Record Warmth Marks U.S. Winter

Americans Bask in Record Warmth

The Associated Press

, Feb. 21, 2002

WASHINGTON -- The United States is basking in record warm weather this
winter.

The nationally averaged temperature was 39.94 degrees Fahrenheit
for November through January, 4.3 degrees above the 1895-2001 long-term average,
said Jay Lawrimore, chief of the Climate Monitoring Branch of the government's
National Climatic Data Center, on Thursday.

The previous record for the
same three-month period was in 1999-2000. Since 1976 the nationally averaged
November-January temperature has risen at a rate of 1.2 degrees Fahrenheit per
decade.

In the November-January period the unusual warmth stretched from
as far west as Montana and to the East Coast. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa,
Massachusetts and Vermont had their warmest November to January, and as many as
18 states from the Plains to the Northeast recorded their second warmest
November-January, according to the climate center, a division of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

A lack of snow cover contributed
to short-term drought conditions in the northern Plains. Absence of snow has
affected many winter festivals in the northern United States.

Overall,
snow and rainfall was near normal, averaged across the country. A dry area
stretched from Florida to Maine, worsening drought conditions along the East
Coast.

Connecticut and Maine experienced their driest November-January
on record and nine other states -- New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, Virginia and South Carolina --
were much drier than normal.

In addition to the United States, worldwide
temperatures were above normal for the period, the center said.

Scott
Stephens, a meteorologist at the center, said a high-pressure ridge in the upper
atmosphere contributed to the readings in the United States by pulling warm air
north into the country.

An ocean phenomenon is in its positive phase,
which usually translates into warmer temperatures in the northern tier of
states.

A new El Nino is developing in the Pacific Ocean, but that
unusual warming is not far enough along to affect the United States yet,
Stephens said.

Asked if global warming, a concern of many
environmentalists, was to blame, Stephens was cautious. "There are those that
will make that argument. I'm not going to make that argument," he said.

"Everyone wants to put a label on things and it's kind of hard to put a
label on Mother Nature, especially when it comes to something as complex as the
atmosphere."